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Watchers of the Sky eBook

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Alfred Noyes

Whereby the stars are steered, and so to read
The future, even perhaps the destinies
Of men and nations,—­only one sure way,
And that’s to watch them, watch them, and record
The truth we know, and not the lies we dream. 
Dear, while I watch them, though the hills and sea
Divide us, every night our eyes can meet
Among those constant glories.  Every night
Your eyes and mine, upraised to that bright realm,
Can, in one moment, speak across the world. 
I shall come back with knowledge and with power,
And you—­will wait for me?”
                            She answered him
In silence, with the starlight of her eyes.

II

He watched the skies at Wittenberg.  The plague
Drove him to Rostoch, and he watched them there;
But, even there, the plague of little minds
Beset him.  At a wedding-feast he met
His noble countryman, Manderup, who asked,
With mocking courtesy, whether Tycho Brahe
Was ready yet to practise his black art
At country fairs.  The guests, and Tycho, laughed;
Whereat the swaggering Junker blandly sneered,
“If fortune-telling fail, Christine will dance,
Thus—­tambourine on hip,” he struck a pose. 
“Her pretty feet will pack that booth of yours.” 
They fought, at midnight, in a wood, with swords. 
And not a spark of light but those that leapt
Blue from the clashing blades.  Tycho had lost
His moon and stars awhile, almost his life;
For, in one furious bout, his enemy’s blade
Dashed like a scribble of lightning into the face
Of Tycho Brahe, and left him spluttering blood,
Groping through that dark wood with outstretched hands,
To fall in a death-black swoon. 
                                They carried him back
To Rostoch; and when Tycho saw at last
That mirrored patch of mutilated flesh,
Seared as by fire, between the frank blue eyes
And firm young mouth where, like a living flower
Upon some stricken tree, youth lingered still,
He’d but one thought, Christine would shrink from him
In fear, or worse, in pity.  An end had come
Worse than old age, to all the glory of youth. 
Urania would not let her lover stray
Into a mortal’s arms.  He must remain
Her own, for ever; and for ever, alone.

Yet, as the days went by, to face the world,
He made himself a delicate mask of gold
And silver, shaped like those that minstrels wear
At carnival in Venice, or when love,
Disguising its disguise of mortal flesh,
Wooes as a nameless prince from far away. 
And when this world’s day, with its blaze and coil
Was ended, and the first white star awoke
In that pure realm where all our tumults die,
His eyes and hers, meeting on Hesperus,
Renewed their troth. 
                     He seemed to see Christine,
Ringed by the pine-trees on that distant hill,
A small white figure, lost in space and time,
Yet gazing at the sky, and conquering all,
Height, depth, and heaven itself, by the sheer power
Of love at one with everlasting laws,
A love that shared the constancy of heaven,
And spoke to him across, above, the world.

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Watchers of the Sky from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.

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